We've written many articles about Gabe Watson,
a diver from Alabama charged with the murder of his
wife, Tina, while diving in Australia. A month-long
inquest concluded that while diving from one of Mike
Ball's boats on the Great Barrier Reef in 2003, Watson
turned off Tina's air and left her to drown. After
pleading guilty to manslaughter due to negligence,
Watson, now 34 and remarried, served 18 months in
an Australian prison before being brought back to
Alabama for a new trial, possibly facing a life sentence
without parole. The ending was quite different there.
The judge acquitted Watson of murder, ending the trial
before the defense had even presented its case, saying
prosecutors lacked evidence to prove Watson intentionally
killed his wife.
Circuit Judge Tommy Nail agreed with defense arguments
that prosecutors failed to show Watson drowned
Tina for insurance money. Another diver who was the
one eyewitness present before Watson swam to the surface
told the jury he did not see Watson switch off Tina's
air supply, and that he thought Watson was trying to
save her. Mail said the state's evidence was "sorely
lacking" and did not prove Watson had any financial motive. Jurors never got to deliberate. "I don't think anyone
knows for sure what happened in the water down
there," said Nail, who repeatedly clashed with prosecutors
during the trial and earlier hearings.
He hobbled the prosecution by refusing to allow
the jury to see video of an underwater re-enactment
Queensland police did at the shipwreck, and surveillance
footage of Watson using bolt-cutters to remove
flowers from Tina's grave. Defense attorneys said
Tina's death was an accident, and that Watson didn't
stand to gain monetarily because Tina's father, Tommy
Thomas, was the beneficiary of her life insurance policy.
Nail blocked Thomas from testifying about Watson's
alleged desire to increase Tina's insurance policy, saying
it was hearsay. That was a blow for prosecutors, who
earlier had been barred from presenting other evidence
about Watson's actions after the death. "It was pretty
evident by then he was going to bounce it," said lead
prosecutor Sam Vaselka. Prosecutors aren't allowed to
try Watson again.
Most of the discussion in the dive community always
assumed Watson's guilt. We carried a piece last August
by Dr. Carl Edmonds, who wrote a strong piece stating
that Watson was innocent. It's interesting to reread now
that Watson is off the hook ( www.undercurrent.org/UCnow/dive_magazine/2011 ).